Vietnam’s economy in first slowdown in four years

Vietnam’s economy expanded an estimated 6.21 per cent this year, slightly less than in 2015 and marking the first slowdown in four years, but a fourth-quarter surge to 6.68 per cent was the best for a year, keeping it among Asia’s fastest-growing economies. which is why particularly stock investors remain upbeat.

Drops in agriculture and mining dragged full year growth below last year’s 6.68 per cent and the government’s target of 6.3-6.5 per cent, the General Statistics Office (GSO) said on December 28, according to Reuters.

“2016 GDP has not reached target or had any major breakthroughs but in general the economy has had good growth except for the agriculture and mining sectors,” GSO head Nguyen Bich Lam told reporters.

In 2015, Vietnam’s economy had expanded at its fastest pace since 2007 having maintained growth momentum since 2012. The slower annual growth this year – the first deceleration since 2012 – left Vietnam ranked behind India, China and the Philippines.

The Statistics Office put the drop in pace down to adverse weather, a marine environmental disaster and an unfavourable global economy.

“The 6.21-per cent growth this year is actually not too bad given the outside factors like weather and the international markets,” said Tran Minh Hoang, chief economist at Vietcombank Securities.

“Next year growth may improve slightly to 6.3-6.5 per cent as the oil market stabilises and public spending increases,” Hoang added.

Severe drought in the Central Highlands coffee growing region, salination in the paddy fields of the Mekong Delta, a cold spell in the north and floods in the central region also trimmed farm sector growth to 1.36 percent in 2016, the statistics office said.

Vietnam is the world’s second largest coffee producer after Brazil and ranks third behind India and Thailand in rice exports. Other key foreign exchange earners include mobile phones, textiles, footwear, fish and shrimp.

Vietnam’s mining sector fell 4 per cent this year on low prices of coal and crude oil, after an increase of 6.5 per cent in 2015, while an enviromental disaster in April that was blamed on the local steel-making unit of a Taiwanese conglomerate devastated fisheries.

Vietnam’s economy expanded an estimated 6.21 per cent this year, slightly less than in 2015 and marking the first slowdown in four years, but a fourth-quarter surge to 6.68 per cent was the best for a year, keeping it among Asia’s fastest-growing economies. which is why particularly stock investors remain upbeat.

Drops in agriculture and mining dragged full year growth below last year’s 6.68 per cent and the government’s target of 6.3-6.5 per cent, the General Statistics Office (GSO) said on December 28, according to Reuters.

“2016 GDP has not reached target or had any major breakthroughs but in general the economy has had good growth except for the agriculture and mining sectors,” GSO head Nguyen Bich Lam told reporters.

In 2015, Vietnam’s economy had expanded at its fastest pace since 2007 having maintained growth momentum since 2012. The slower annual growth this year – the first deceleration since 2012 – left Vietnam ranked behind India, China and the Philippines.

The Statistics Office put the drop in pace down to adverse weather, a marine environmental disaster and an unfavourable global economy.

“The 6.21-per cent growth this year is actually not too bad given the outside factors like weather and the international markets,” said Tran Minh Hoang, chief economist at Vietcombank Securities.

“Next year growth may improve slightly to 6.3-6.5 per cent as the oil market stabilises and public spending increases,” Hoang added.

Severe drought in the Central Highlands coffee growing region, salination in the paddy fields of the Mekong Delta, a cold spell in the north and floods in the central region also trimmed farm sector growth to 1.36 percent in 2016, the statistics office said.

Vietnam is the world’s second largest coffee producer after Brazil and ranks third behind India and Thailand in rice exports. Other key foreign exchange earners include mobile phones, textiles, footwear, fish and shrimp.

Vietnam’s mining sector fell 4 per cent this year on low prices of coal and crude oil, after an increase of 6.5 per cent in 2015, while an enviromental disaster in April that was blamed on the local steel-making unit of a Taiwanese conglomerate devastated fisheries.